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Regina H Reynolds
Molecular biologist turned bioinformatician, with a passion for systems-level biology, statistics and data visualisation and the application of these to answer biological questions. My current work explores the role of different cell types in neurodegeneration, making use of large-scale genomic and transcriptomic datasets.
Education
PhD, Bioinformatics
University College London
London, UK
2021 - 2016
- Thesis: Exploring the importance of cell-type-specific gene expression regulation and splicing in Parkinson’s disease
- Integrated bulk-tissue and single-cell transcriptomic data with summary-level genetic association data to investigate the role of cell-type-specific gene expression regulation and splicing in Parkinson’s disease.
- Published 3 first/co-first author research articles and 1 first author review.
- Successfully secured £10,000 from Signe og Peter Gregersens Mindefond to undertake transcriptional profiling of Parkinson’s disease brain tissue.
MSc, Molecular Biomedicine
University of Copenhagen
Copenhagen, Denmark
2016 - 2014
- Thesis: Changes in the miR-34a-SIRT1 axis in Huntington’s disease
- Grade: A (92.5%)
BSc, Molecular Biomedicine
University of Copenhagen
Copenhagen, Denmark
2013 - 2010
- Thesis: Pro-apoptotic factors in Huntington’s disease: a study in the R6/2 transgenic mouse model
- Grade: A (96.7%)
Work experience
Research Fellow
University College London
London, UK
Present - 2021
- Lead analyst involved in processing and analysing transcriptomic data generated with the aim of identifying molecular signatures of Parkinson’s disease progression. Work done primarily using R, nextflow and docker.
- Co-lead of Code and Pipeline Alignment Working Group in the Aligning Sciences Across Parkinson’s initiative. This group aims to maximize the value of data generated from finite post-mortem brain tissues through code alignment, which will enable eventual meta-analysis.
Research Assistant
University of Copenhagen
Copenhagen, Denmark
2016 - 2016
- Led project exploring the interactions between miR-34a, Sirt1 and p53 in a Huntington’s disease mouse model, which culminated in a first author publication.
Housing Assistant
DIS, Study Abroad in Scandinavia, Denmark
Copenhagen, Denmark
2015 - 2013
- Student assistant involved in general administrative tasks; organisation of bi-annual orientation meeting for hosts/students; and conflict mediation between hosts and students.
Teaching experience
Subsidiary PhD Supervisor
University College London
London, UK
Present - 2021
- Involved in top-level project planning and provide a second opinion/additional areas of expertise where appropriate.
R fundamentals with Clinician Coders
University College London
London, UK
Present - 2019
- Developed materials and led workshops teaching basic R and tidy data principles to clinical academics.
Omics Techniques
King’s College London
London, UK
2019 - 2017
- Lectured graduate level students on the principles of genome-wide association studies and led a workshop on how/why to use the Genotype-Tissue Expression portal.